Field report on experimental comparison of a WiFi mesh network against commercial 5G in an underground disaster environment.
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Mobile robots in disaster scenarios such as tunnels, mines, or collapsed structures face communication challenges for reliable video streaming to remote control centers. Commercial fifth-generation (5G) networks provide low latency and high bandwidth, especially in urban areas, but ad hoc WiFi networks with static and robotic nodes can provide a solution to attenuation in occluded areas. This paper offers a field experiment report from a search and rescue (SAR) exercise where we tested a WiFi mesh network against commercial 5G in tunnels 184 m long, 6 m wide, and 4 m high. Two operator streamed video to the Internet through a mesh that consisted of two static nodes and two mobile nodes on unmanned ground vehicles (UGV). Latency was measured for both operators for different video resolutions, as well as for a 5G customer-premises equipment (CPE) on-board a scout-UGV. The paper discusses experimental results and lessons learned.
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Juan Bravo-Arrabal, C.S. Álvarez-Merino, J.J. Fernandez-Lozano, Jose Antonio Gómez-Ruiz, Anthony Mandow, Raquel Barco, and Alfonso Garcia-Cerezo. “Field report on experimental comparison of a WiFi mesh network against commercial 5G in an underground disaster environment”. Proceedings of the IEEE International Symposium on Safety, Security, and Rescue Robotics, SSRR,2023. Fukushima, Japan.
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